Theater Review: Keith Boynton's The Quotable Assassin and Walls

Though not long out of college, playwright Keith Boynton has a marvelously clever and pointed way with words. "Stoppardian" has become a cliché, but there is a pithiness and playfulness in his dialogue that suggests happy inspiration from the great wordsmiths of the modern stage. Boynton puts this facility in the service of two stories, on the surface quite different, but underneath betraying parallel narrative flow and concerns. The result is a resonant evening of theater, although the two approaches — one story quotidian, the other mythically grand — do not, ultimately, succeed equally well.

The first play, Walls, is a taut, tense, and funny two-character dramatization of what would seem a rather unremarkable situation. An old flame returns, complicating the life of a woman who is trying to get over her father's recent death by throwing herself into renovating his house. Carter (Mike LaVoie), the clean-cut interloper, hides his emotions behind a wit that's too ready for his own good, but as the dance of words progresses, we begin to see the fragile nobility that made Gail (Joan Kubicek) like him so much in the first place. With their sturdy, snappy performances these two robust actors fully inhabit the aggressive dialogue, compacting its larger-than-life directness and its writerly cleverness into refreshingly homey art. Thus the magic of theater. These two characters deserve each other — in a good way. Just the right length, the story ends with a satisfying punch. Directed fluidly by the author, the play is a small gem.

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Mike Lavoie and Joan Kubicek in Walls. Photo courtesy of DARR Publicity

The second play, The Quotable Assassin, is a period drama in which the life of a condemned revolutionary, Simon (Boynton), is spared temporarily through the influence of Lucia (Roya Shanks), a popular novelist who wishes to base her latest work on his life. During a series of prison-cell interviews, defenses break down on both sides. Shanks is utterly convincing as the hyper-cultured, emotionally pent-up celebrity author who, Capote-like, bonds fatefully with her murderous subject. Her inner struggles play out in her every expression and gesture. She's an absolute joy. Boynton, however, makes his character rather too self-consciously charismatic, embracing his own elevated language so lovingly that, instead of living through the words, he turns speech into an end in itself. While this makes for an entertaining character, sometimes fascinating and always fun to watch and listen to, we don't see in his idealistic smartass the likeable side Lucia sees.

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Blogcritics' Culture and Theater Editor. In addition to reviewing NYC theater, he writes a semi-regular round-up of independent music releases. By day he is a computer professional and a freelance writer and editor, and at night he's a …

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Article comments

  • 1 - Joan Hunt

    Nov 07, 2006 at 12:29 am

    You make me miss the theater, Jon. I guess it's time to put the budget in Old Globe mode.

  • 2 - Jon Sobel

    Nov 07, 2006 at 11:33 am

    Thanks, Joan. BTW, I hear that if you become a theater reviewer, you get complimentary tickets. Just a rumor.

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